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<resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-2.2" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-2.2 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-2.2/metadata.xsd">
	<identifier identifierType="DOI">10.3886/ICPSR01222.v1</identifier>
	<creators>
    	
			<creator>
				<creatorName>Kliesen, Kevin L.</creatorName>
			</creator>
    	
			<creator>
				<creatorName>Poole, William</creatorName>
			</creator>
    	
	</creators>
	<titles>
		<title>Agricultural Outcomes and Monetary Policy Actions:  Strange Bedfellows or Kissin' Cousins?</title>
		
	</titles>
	<publisher>Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research</publisher>
	<publicationYear>2000</publicationYear>
	<subjects>
		
      		<subject>agricultural productivity</subject>
      	
      		<subject>agriculture</subject>
      	
      		<subject>monetary policy</subject>
      	
	</subjects>
	<dates>
		<date dateType="Available">2000-08-28</date>
		<date dateType="Updated">2000-08-28</date>
		
	</dates>
	<resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset">
		
	</resourceType>
	<alternateIdentifiers>
		<alternateIdentifier alternateIdentifierType="ICPSR Study Number">1222</alternateIdentifier>
	</alternateIdentifiers>
	<version>1</version>
	<descriptions>
		<description>United States agriculture is a success story of high
 productivity growth maintained over a long period of
 time. Nevertheless, the industry today suffers from the same problems
 it has always suffered from: droughts, locusts, and market
 disruptions. In this article, the authors explain how monetary policy
 can contribute to a healthy agriculture sector. The reality is that
 the fundamental economic forces controlling the destiny of agriculture
 -- high productivity growth, the hazards of nature, the low price and
 income elasticities of demand, and the instability of conditions in
 important export markets -- are things that the Federal Reserve Board
 can do nothing about. The main message is that the best the Fed can do
 to stabilize the agricultural sector is to maintain low and steady
inflation.</description>
		
		
		
 	</descriptions>
	
</resource>